| By Miko Matsumura | Article Rating: |
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| July 5, 2009 12:45 PM EDT | Reads: |
2,925 |
Chuck Phillips, president of Oracle, said that Oracle was committed to provide "A Single Stack of Technology to Simplify Enterprise IT".
I fundamentally question this premise.
In order for a "Single Stack" to successfully simplify IT, Enterprise Software practitioners must commit their entire Enterprise Architecture to a single vendor, namely Oracle. Recall that architecture is a *design* discipline. The absolute underpinnings of design is *intention*. This is a fundamental premise of my book, SOA Adoption for Dummies. http://miko.com/book.
Handing your Enterprise Architecture over to Oracle is unrealistic. For end-users who want to capitulate and give up on IT as a provider of
competitive differentiation, this might seem like a way of reducing cost and complexity. In the short term, they will be able to reduce their costs by eliminating most of their IT departments. However, in the long term, being beholden to the Dark Lord Sauron, the master of the ring will prove to be expensive.
In the shadow of Oracle's towers of Orthanc and Minas Morgul, Oracle launches 11g on all of middle earth.
Oracle has made a big commitment to Java with the acquisition of Sun to serve as the next layer up from SQL.
Is Java the one ring to rule them all? To some extent, Java certainly provides some nice unifying application logic for the Oracle stack.
But the true core is murky and nebulous at best. The demonstration featured discussion about SCA (Service Component Architecture) and the "Single Layer of Metadata". But the "Single Layer" alluded to by Chuck Phillips seemed to refer to the configuration management database that glues together all of the pieces of Oracles M&A Strategy. This makes sense because Chuck Phillips is in charge of Oracle's M&A strategy.
However, Thomas Kurian seems to allude to a "Single Layer of Metadata" in the "SOA Development" layer featuring their Java Software Developer suite, formerly JDeveloper.
When asked to demo the SOA Governance solution, the demoer seemed to be alluding to the "closed loop governance" capabilities of the Oracle SOA Governance Registry Repository. This product has its historical roots in BEA Flashline.
So instead of "Fusion Middleware" we have Confusion Muddleware.
Now if you add the WebLogic Apache Beehive, MySQL, Sun Identity Manager, JCAPS, GlassFish and all of the exciting middleware technologies coming from the Sun Microsystems acquisition, you have Contusion Scuttleware.
Published July 5, 2009 Reads 2,925
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As Vice President and Chief Strategist at Software AG, Miko Matsumura is responsible for the technology strategy. He holds 12 years of experience in Enterprise Software and Middleware technologies. Prior to his current role, Matsumura served as vice president of SOA product marketing at webMethods and vice president of worldwide marketing at Infravio. He emerged as an industry thought leader while at The Middleware Company, where he was a co-creator responsible for building the partner program for SOA Blueprints, the first complete vendor-neutral specification of a SOA. He holds an MBA from San Francisco State University and a Masters Degree in Neuroscience from Yale University.
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